How to make curtains, curtains design, curtain needs, curtain styles

Showing posts with label bedroom curtains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bedroom curtains. Show all posts

Friday, June 5, 2015

How to Improve the Interior Design of your Bedroom

bedroom designs
How to Improve the Interior Design of your Bedroom
There is no doubt that the bedroom is the most comfortable room of your house. It is private and designed for providing you the maximum amount of comfort. Apart from a warm bed, a bedroom also has furnishings like night stand, dresser and closet. Many bedrooms also have an attached bathroom whereas some others have a small balcony connected to it. If the interior décor of your bedroom is beautiful, then you would have a great time relaxing there. A bedroom is your calm sanctuary. You must make it the perfect place by enhancing the interior décor. Here are some methods by which you can do it:
1- Choosing the accurate bed for your bedroom:
accurate bed for your bedroom
This is the most important thing. Choosing a huge bed can make your bedroom look crowded if your room is quite small. If the room is spacious, then choosing a small bed can make it look inelegant. You have to choose the right bed, keeping in mind the size of your room. You must also choose a nice mattress.
2. Selecting some delightful colors:
delightful colors for your bedroom
In general, warm colors, pastel colors, neutral colors and earth colors go well for a bedroom. You can use these colors in your ceilings, walls and furniture. Extreme bright colors must be avoided as it can cause difficulty in sleeping. Soothing colors would keep you calm and peaceful in your bedroom.
3. Selecting a good flooring material:
good flooring material for bedroom
If you choose cold flooring such as ceramic tiles, granite or marble, your floor will remain cold most of the time. So, it is better to choose laminated flooring or wood flooring. In case you have chosen cold flooring, use a warm carpet near your bed.
4. Choosing a beautiful wall décor:
beautiful wall décor for bedroom
You can choose beautiful wallpaper, portraits painted by artists or pictures of your family for your wall décor. Matching the wall color with your wall décor can make your bedroom look aesthetically beautiful.
5. Selecting the perfect curtains:
perfect curtains for bedroom
Pick dark curtains for your bedroom only if you have a light colored wall. You can also sleep comfortably during the day if you have chosen dark curtains. However, if your wall color is bright, then go for light colored curtains.
Apart from these 5 tips that can help you to enhance the décor of your bedroom, you should also use a lampshade for perfect lighting and make sure that your bedroom has good ventilation. If the interior design is made perfectly, then you can have a great relaxing ambiance in your bedroom. So, make it a great place today!

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Ideas for DIY Canopy Bed Frame and Curtains

Ideas for DIY Canopy Bed Frame and Curtains


Here are inspiring canopy bed frame designs and pictures for you to choose from. You will see: bed curtains canopy rods bedroom, romantic canopy beds decoration, your private room with bed canopy ideas, bedroom luxury canopy bed curtains ideas with white curtain, DIY canopy bed with white curtain and lighting.










Sunday, September 28, 2014

Gorgeous Ideas for Bedroom Blinds and Curtains

As we all know blinds are a perfect window treatment for creating privacy in a bedroom, at the same time as still being able to allow some normal light into the room.

Now, let's see some examples here of how they are used on their own or combined with drapery.
Colored roller can blinds used in this bedroom, privacy is only required at night and the curtains are only decorative side curtains.



We use timber venetian blinds here to sort out light during the day and create privacy at night. There are decorative side curtains at the windows, so the timber venetian blinds are the only form of privacy at night.



Now with micro blinds which are used in this bedroom so the look stays light and airy. They are softened by the use of sheers on a casement heading threaded through a decorative rod and held back by a tieback. Once again the blinds are the only form of privacy at night.



A lot of various window treatments in this bedroom. From left to right, louver blind on a small window. Roman blind or shade between the beds and a pinoleum blind at the large window. This is used to filter light and privacy, as the main curtains can be drawn at night.



Attractive combination of blinds and curtains for these palladian windows in the bedroom. The top curve has been left exposed and the blinds attached at the top of the rectangle window. The decorative rod has been attached well above the windows, so that we get to see the detail of the lovely palladian windows.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Bed and Window Curtains

In the 18th century, bed furnishings were often the single most expensive item in a household, and goods were woven only 18 to 28 inches wide. Textiles are relatively inexpensive today, and twice as wide, so we allow ourselves the luxury of matching patterns when we join seams. Such waste was virtually unknown in colonial America.

When choosing fabric, trim, and design, the first consideration is the room and the overall effect you wish to achieve. Are curtains intended to be the focal point of the room or an understated complement to other furnishings and decoration?  To replicate a period interior, choose a documented reproduction, such as a blue Indigo resist, a woven linen check, or a red copperplate print (toile de Jouy). Other aspirations in decorative style allow for wider choices of material and in style and technique of fabrication. 

A bold monochromatic printed toile makes a statement, while a crisp white cotton dimity or seersucker suggests a comforting coolness to counter Southern summers. Line a printed toile with a contrasting color for impact: the purple toile in the Governor’s Palace is lined with green silk. A soft cherry-red cotton satin lining creates a cheerful glow inside red toile bed curtains. Consider using fabrics in creative ways: think of the decorative possibilities of using horizontal, or “railroad,” treatments for valances, or of using the appliqué technique, where textile elements are cut out and sewn onto a base fabric in a decorative manner.

A strongly patterned fabric such as a toile can carry a heavy fringe treatment to edge curtains and valances. The dense green wool fringe on the purple toile at the Governor’s Palace is a good example.
In contrast, an unlined curtain and valance treatment with a strongly shaped valance—such as the green checked bed furniture in the George Wythe House is effectively trimmed with a simple twill or woven checked tape binding.

One of the most graceful 18th-century curtain designs is the fluid “drapery” curtain that draws up into a soft swag. This treatment creates a softer and more dramatic alternative to the static “swag and jabot.” Popular from about 1750 to 1780, the “draw-up drapery” style was a favorite with English patrons who used Thomas Chippendale as their interior designer. Chippendale intended the patterns in his book for the upholstery workshop as well as the patron, so he gave instructions and diagrams for the design of the cornices (often fabric covered) and the pulley lath systems that supported bed drapery and window curtains. 

These curtains work beautifully in a variety of fabrics. In the dining room of the Governor’s Palace they are shown in an unlined springy wool moreen. An elaborate Indian chintz bed at the Palace is lined with green cotton satin; the curtains are pulled up in double drapery, one of the variations shown in Chippendale’s influential 1754 pattern book The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker’s Director. If the curtain is lined, the lining fabric needs to be sufficiently decorative—it will show when the curtain is pulled up. Satin weave cotton is appropriate for cotton; a complementary printed fabric can also be effective in more modern treatments.

The windows’ proportions along with the scale of the room will determine which curtains will work most effectively. For instance, a pair of narrow windows on one wall might look best if each window gets one curtain, each swagged to the outside, rather than two panels crowded onto each window.

Chippendale shows the “draw-up drapery” with the complete architectural complement of a molded or carved cornice, sometimes covered with fabric matching the curtains, and valances (sometimes buckram stiffened) beneath the cornice at the top of the curtain. The curtains can be mounted to a pulley lath without cornices (as with more contemporary balloon shades), but the effect is not as strong or as architecturally complete.  The valance is an option that can stand in place of the cornice, or that can be omitted at more modest windows if a cornice is used.

Whether you make your own pattern and assemble the curtains according to Chippendale’s design, or hire an interior decorator or upholstery shop to handle the sewing fabrication, bear in mind a few details: The pulley lath, mounted with angle irons to the inside of the cornice, holds and organizes the lines that raise the curtains. The lines run through a row of rings sewn into the lining side of the curtain, then through pulleys or screw eyes at the outer corner (or corners, depending on whether your window has one or two curtain panels) of the pulley lath. The lines run back down the side of the window to be tied off on “cloak pins” that anchor the curtain in the raised position. For an authentic look, pairs of decorative cast brass or enameled cloak pins should be used for securing the draperies of both bed and window hangings. A modern alternative is to mount pairs of cabinet pulls to the window molding—much more attractive than the conventional window shade anchor. These should be mounted low on the window molding, between the sill and the chair rail. 

Each pair of curtains is made of two panels that reach to the floor—the length is very important for creating the proper effect when the curtain is drawn up. The width of each curtain depends upon the desired effect. A sumptuous curtain in silk damask will require many widths of fabric; a slightly austere colonial effect in checked linen will need fewer. Avoid making the panels too skimpy, however, or they will lose some of the soft and rich effect when drawn up. Each panel should be at least twice as wide as the window (measured outside the window frame) before gathering.

If the edge of the curtains is bound with tape that wraps around the edge, outer curtain and lining should be sewn with wrong sides together. Otherwise, right sides should go together and are inverted at the top before gathering into heading. Add trim after turning inside out. Unlike contemporary curtains, this style does not have a return of face fabric on the lining side. Face fabric and lining need to the same width, or the effect will be ruined when the curtain is drawn up and the decorative lining is revealed in the swagged “tail.”

A less complicated way to get an effect similar to a “draw-up drapery” bed or window curtain is by swagging a gathered curtain panel using a button a tape loop. These curtains could be easily and quickly closed to give the sleeper privacy or to protect from mosquitoes. This treatment was often used on hangings made for portable tent beds (also called field, or camp, beds). Curtains were sewn to the tester, or ceiling, of the bed; the entire unit draped over the bedstead as a tent drapes over its frame. George Hepplewhite illustrated this treatment in his 1787 pattern book The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Guide. White cotton (particularly a ribbed stripe called dimity) was popular for this style of bed treatment, in vogue in the 18th and early 19th centuries. 


Since portability was a factor for original tent bed hangings used during army campaigns, curtains were seldom lined. Edges were bound with white twill tape or trimmed with cotton fringe. Original military tent bedsteads did not have cornices or valances, but when the fashion was domesticated these more elaborate elements were sometimes added.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Attractive and Incredible Ideas for Bathroom Designs

If you are building a new house or modernizing an old one, bathrooms is an area of main interest and need a lot of attention. Bathrooms engage more attention to best locations for water points and power connections. Mostly, it is best to plan well ahead the locations for water points and power connections as these may involve major construction work if you want to relocate them at a later time.
Likewise you have to plan well ahead about the power connections, switchboard, light fittings, heated towel racks, backlit mirrors, built-in lights for cabinets and drawers and motion sensor lights etc. Also plan to have the best lighting possible with skylights and windows for natural lighting and wall sconces, ceiling lights, under-cabinet lights and focus lights for make-up area so that you have good amount of lighting which can make the bathroom look spacious.

Here are some images of beautiful looking bathrooms. The bathrooms are done very elegantly looking large with a neat, smooth look with classy glossy looking fittings. Don’t you think you will like your bathroom to look like this?









Saturday, May 25, 2013

Curtain Designs and Styles for Bedrooms

Bedroom curtains are essential for decor and great the look of your bedroom. Curtains to prevent sunlight from entering your room and also give you privacy from the outside. And used the bedroom curtains lined for insulation and soundproofing in your bedroom. To buy at half price curtains have to conduct a search through.



You can find various colors and designs and styles in the curtains; choose curtain according to the style of your bedroom. Match with the color of the bedroom curtains with furnishing, creating a unique style that coordinates with the design of your bedroom. Some of the options in the bedroom blinds include; linen curtains, box pleated blinds, and Jabot stolen goods such as curtains, draperies classes, Sheer or transparent curtains. Let's take a look at these curtains, methods, and one by one.

Linen Curtains



Will be blue and maroon color of linen and curtains definitely increase of grace and glow of your bedroom. Being used bold colored linen curtains in the bedrooms to a large extent under the title Modern. It is your choice if you want to apply quiet or dark colors such as purple, black, gray or dark brown. Linen curtains are inexpensive and available in endless varieties of styles and colors. You must have the option to be durable and easily cleanable linen curtains.

Box pleated blinds



People often use the box pleated, curtains in the bedrooms because they are looking sleek and give your bedroom a customized look. Although these curtains are more expensive than normal, and curtains, but they definitely add an elegant look to design your bedroom.

Sheer curtains or transparent



For romantic couples, and there is no better fit of sheer or transparent curtains as they disperse colored light in your bedroom. Sheer curtains are available in two types; plain and textured. You have the option to choose from different curtain fabrics. Flowers, clothes and intricate embroidery allows you to amplify the desired effect with creative ideas. You can create an exciting environment in your bedroom by inventing an amazing idea. Pro largest sheer curtains is that they allow plenty of sunlight in your bedroom, while the problem is that they can not afford to California privacy. However, sheer curtains with blinds to maintain good privacy in your room.

Swag curtains Style Jabot



Welcome to take a look at the interior of your bedroom, you must use a method curtains swag and jabot. These types of curtains can be used in any room. To download the swags and jabots, you have three options; swags and one, two or three times. Pattern curtains and jabot need the booty heavy fabric so that they are on the expensive side a little.

Layered Curtains

Layered curtains are available in different styles and colors of light. Curtains are prepared with a heavy fabric layers and give your bedroom a nice look. Match the color of the curtains with the rest of the furniture, and it would give your bedroom a great look.

Color must match the curtains with neighboring walls, but you should not use a dark color on the light colored wall nearby. It should be the choice of materials and shades according to your upholstery or furniture. Traditionally used cotton and silk curtains by everyone, but now you also have the option of polyester and synthetic curtains. For a nice look of your bedroom, and the options are self-painted, colorful weave pattern shades.


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Different Kinds of Curtains for Different Kinds of Windows


There are several kinds of windows, JL and each must, of necessity, be differently treated. Always see to it that the curtains do not prevent the window being readily and easily opened. Curtains that have to be pushed, hauled and shoved aside every time we want a breath of air are an unforgivable nuisance. They should be hung far enough back on the trim, not to allow a shaft of light to show between the curtain and the casing. They should protect from prying eyes, mitigate cold draughts, and last of all be an adornment. Curtains properly made and hung should fulfill all these requirements.

There are French windows, casement windows, sash or hung windows; and transom windows combined with all three. French windows are usually nothing more or less than doors, but should be curtained as windows if there are other kinds of windows in the room. If all the windows are French, they should be hung as doors are hung, i.e., the portieres and hangings should match.

Over the glass some thin material should be stretched, attached to a rod top and bottom. An excellent rod to use is flat, Ys inch thick and about % inch wide. This is better with thin curtaining than a round rod as it keeps the curtains close against the pane. The side edges should be very carefully adjusted else the edge will bulge. Always hem the edge, even if it is selvage, so that there will be a firm and secure edge to stretch. These thin curtains may or may not have a heading. They should not cover the trim of the window casing itself. The top panels may be left exposed, the curtain only reaching the bottom of the top pane. This is an informal treatment and permits more light into the room, at the same time protecting us from the outside. Such curtains should never be permitted to hang loose, as they would flap each time the window was opened.

For over-draperies on French windows a heavy material is suitable. It should be hung on the outside trim on strong rods, as the pull is severe. Plain long hangings may be used wide enough to pull together at night. The hangings should be lined to give them body, also because the outside as well as the inside is seen. If a valance is hung between the curtains, the curtains must remain stationary. A fitted or French pleated valance, hung across the entire opening on a separate rod, permits the curtain being easily pulled back and forth. If the windows open out, either of these methods are adaptable: if they open in, with no depth to the casing, the doors would catch in the valance. Therefore, the only practical hanging is plain straight folds on either side placed well on to the casing at the top. If the window has a stationary transom above, a valance may be hung all the way across, or better still, one-third on each side, permitting the light to come through the center of the transom and giving the decorative effect of a valance. The valance should be shirred or made with a French pleated heading. The method of doing this is treated in a later chapter. The depth of the valance varies from one-third to one-half yard.

Casement windows allow of a variety of charming treatments. The shirred thin curtains may be stretched across the window casing and attached firmly at top and bottom, otherwise when the casement window was thrown open, the curtains would flap in the wind. If the lights are small in casement windows, it is best to leave them uncovered. Pots of plants arranged on the window-sill give the necessary protection from the outside. Chintz or casement cloth curtains may be hung on the outside of the trim and should be made wide enough to come together when pulled. Hung with rings and rods adjusted to slip easily back and forth, these curtains may be pulled at night. If a valance is used it must be hung on a separate rod completely across the curtains. This window arrangement is extremely picturesque.

When thin curtains are used against the glass, the over-curtaining may be hung with a valance between, thus making them stationary. The former method, however, is preferable. Casement overhangings should not come to the floor but should end at the sill. As the sill usually stands out from the window trim, it is best not to have them come below the sill. A window seat below the casement should be upholstered in the same material as the hangings.

If the sill is broad, a good effect may be had by hanging the thin curtains directly under the heavier ones on the outside of the trim, that is, leaving the window pane itself uncovered, but softening and enriching the effect of the over-curtains by the soft thin ones directly underneath. These should be extended 6 inches or 8 inches beyond the heavier curtains. The color contrast should not be too sharp. For example, the casement window in the bedroom or dining room might be hung with yellow and green flowered chintz, and thin curtains could be of a soft muslin or madras with yellow dots or small figures. Such a treatment needs above all to be fresh and picturesque. Imagine at such a window yellow daffodils or chrysanthemums!  A large bowl of gold fish and on either side a box tree, pyramidal in shape make a good window decoration for the winter.

Casement cloth is the traditional material for casement windows. The colors are rather somber and the texture very smooth and plain; therefore it were better to use in a living or dining room or hall, than a chamber. The curtains should be edged with a simple cut fringe of the same tone. Casement cloth always needs some finish in the way of fringe or guimpe.
With equally good taste it may be hung as an under- or over-curtain at a casement window.

In a casement window in a library or living room, an unusual effect may be had by inserting one or three panes of stained decorative glass. The design must be excellent and the color good: otherwise the effect will be cheap and tawdry. These decorative panes give a note of interest and also may be very lovely with the light shining through them, laying splendid splotches of color on a polished floor. Be careful that the color does not fall on a vari-colored rug or a piece of furniture, else half the effect will be lost.

A group of casement windows set in a deep embrasure gives opportunity for handsome and unusual effects. Each window may be hung with casement cloth, and at the entrance of the embrasure, heavy curtains reaching to the ground may be used. This creates an alcove. If, instead, we wish to make the embrasure part of the room itself, the thin under-hangings may be put directly against the windows and the heavy draperies hung at either end, connected with a valance over the entire group of windows. Or else, one heavy curtain may be hung between each window and at the end, valances hung between them. Any or all of these treatments will give an excellent effect, provided the curtains are well made and evenly hung.

With ordinary hung windows, which of themselves are not decorative, we should make a distinct decorative feature of the hangings. A large unbroken expanse of plate glass certainly needs some softening and surrounding decoration as to curtaining. The day has past for the draped and festooned and over ruffled hanging.

Once everything was done to disguise a window as such. Simpler methods have come to replace these offenses against simplicity and health.

Sash or under-curtains are made to be hung from the top of the upper window frame reaching to the sill. These are hung with rings and rods and are easily adjusted. The objection to them is that when the lower sash is opened the thin curtains fly out of the window, get dirty, and their fabric is impaired. Another method is to attach one pair of curtains at the top of the window casing. These reach the top of the lower window. A second pair are hung from the top of the lower casing and left free or attached at the bottom. This makes raising the window a little difficult, as the lower sash has to be raised up under the top curtain. A third method is to stretch a pair of curtains on the lower sash only. Thus we get a good share of light from the top uncovered glass, and at the same time we are protected from the outside by the lower sash. Any sort of a thin lace which, in the trade, includes nets, scrims, muslins and laces, answers the purpose.

For over-draperies many suitable materials may be used. The curtains should be hung on the trim, exposing as much as is desired of the woodwork. This is more a matter of choice than taste. If the woodwork is very fine and tones in well with the sidewall, it is well to leave it exposed, as it makes an architectural feature of the window opening. On the other hand, if the casing is poor in construction and color, the over-draperies may be hung at the outside of the trim and as high up as possible, thus concealing the entire woodwork. In a room where the woodwork is white and the paper dark, the use of a lighter toned hanging effectually conceals the woodwork and avoids an effect which otherwise, on account of the too sharp contrast of woodwork and paper, would be disastrous.

If we wish to make a room appear higher, we can hang curtains at the top of the trim. If the curtains come to the floor, this tends to make the room look much higher. This forms a succession of vertical lines in a room. On the other hand, should we wish to make the room look lower, hang the curtains low on the trim and almost the full width of it. If the trim is exposed at the top it must be exposed on the sides, but not in its entirety.

In some old houses, built in the period of solid mahogany doors and beautifully carved mantels, we find really exquisite window and door trims, finely proportioned cornices and side pilasters with hand carving which it would seem a pity to cover. To carry out their exquisite feeling use net curtains trimmed with real lace and repeating, if possible, something of the design of the woodwork. I have in mind one such treatment. The casings have in the side-panels roses and in the lace of the curtains the same motif is used. The curtains reach just to the perfectly proportioned paneling below the window. A valance is hung between each curtain and the color tones perfectly with that of the woodwork. It gives to this drawing room a lightness and refinement that suits the period in which the room was conceived.

It is always a question of dispute whether or not draperies should come to the sill or to the floor. If they come to the floor they should be made to just clear. The weight of hanging will always tend to make them longer. For formal rooms, these long curtains are best. They add to formality and richness. Curtains planned to come only to the sill should better come to the bottom of the window casing. It is more consistent with the idea of outlining the entire window opening. Moreover if they just top the sill, there is nothing to hinder them from blowing out every time the window is opened, but coming below the sill helps to keep them inside. Such draperies may be hung as a pair of straight hangings or with a valance between, or with a full width valance.

A valance is preferable in every instance because it serves as a connection for outline and color. If the curtain, for instance, is rather dark and hangs in straight long folds, the room, with many openings, has the effect of a succession of dark divisions. If, on the other hand, the line and color is carried across by a valance, we have the horizontal line to break the continuous vertical effect. Also without it, there is usually an ugly empty space at the top, disclosing a rod or two. The work and expense of a valance, particularly one hung between the curtains, is well worth the effect. The manner of cutting, making and applying valances will be taken up in a later chapter.

Any of these various types of windows may have a transom overhead. This may be treated as part of the window opening, as a distinct window, or as a group of windows. If the first is the case, it can be hung with a valance all the way across or part way across, pleated or shirred. The curtains themselves should start underneath at the top of the valance; in fact, the transom should be treated merely as an extra window casing. If a separate window or a group is made of it, thin curtains to match the under-curtains should be shirred and attached top and bottom. Heavy curtains may be hung at either end, the height of the transom, but this is rather an unfortunate arrangement. It were well either to have thin shirred curtains entirely covering the glass or else put a valance over the transom forming one unit with the window below.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Curtains for Country Cottages




For country cottage use, curtains may be made of unbleached cotton with a two and one-half inch ruffle down the inside and at the bottom, and hung on rods at the top and bottom sash. This makes four at each window. When the panes are of small squares, the effect is charming. They are used in place of shades. Rather narrow over-curtains of plain colored material hung in straight folds add color.




Plants put on the window ledge with these ruffled curtains and overhangings give just the right cottage touch reminiscent of Kent and Surrey. The same idea can be applied to camps and bungalows. Shade fixtures rust and get out of order during the severe winter weather. Also they become frayed, and dampness takes out the stiffness. Therefore the little cotton washable curtains with or without ruffles are most serviceable. For overhangings in a camp, if one wants a bit of color, Turkey red stripes are effective and durable. Washable materials are best for the country house as each season the hangings may be carefully laundered and put away in large boxes, ready for the next season's use. Almost all cotton curtains shrink. Before laundering rip the hems and after washing rehem them.

Making Curtains and Hangings


The General Principles of Exposure, Locality and Architecture Uniformity Outdoors and Indoors General Wear


We come to the treatment of windows with more enthusiasm than to any other part of house furnishing. The background carefully decided upon, the question of the sturdy-legged table passed, we arrive at the delectable affairs of curtaining.

There are several general principles to be observed: exposure, style of architecture, and locality, i.e., in town or country houses.

For windows with a southern exposure it were best to use against the glass a semitransparent material as the full glare is unpleasant and this fabric distributes the light more evenly over the room. The quality of the material must be durable since the sun not only fades it but tends to rot as well.

Curtains of thin material placed against the glass are called outside or sash curtains,
the heavier curtains are called inside hangings or over-draperies.

The semi-transparent material protects the real window drapery, acting as a buffer against glare and heat. It were also well to line curtains put at a southern exposure, as this is a further protection, and the lining may be easily renewed, thereby adding years of service to the drapery. Soft mellow tones may be selected as the sunlight itself adds brilliancy.

Within the past few years there have been put on the market many sunfast materials which give satisfaction and service. The fabric is cotton and comes in various weights and textures. Dyers have not been able to produce a sunfast silk, a quality in silk not taking to sunfast dye. However, many of the cotton fabrics are so cleverly mercerized that they both look and feel like silk. There is something about foreign dyed materials that will withstand the sun far better than domestic goods. In selecting materials, choose an imported cotton or linen fabric, for though the initial expense may be greater, the durability as to color and texture, to say frothing of the superior design, is well worth the outlay.



For the northern exposure warm tones of yellow, orange and brown are the best choice. We must counteract the full blast of our bleak northern skies. We must obliterate any sense of gloom, and light filtering through a warm-toned curtain may work miracles in the darkest corner. We covet this effect of cheeriness. In the northern exposure we do not have to consider the problem of fading, but, curiously enough, the most fadable color violet
is the last color we should choose for a northern exposure.

For the east and west windows we may run the gamut as to color and fabric. In the country house, freshness is the requisite for curtaining. Linen or ere tonne hangings are most appropriate, as they can be easily laundered and therefore kept fresh. They bring indoors their gay flowers and gayer birds and act as a transition between the outside garden and the indoor rooms. Fresh muslin is attractive for the upstairs rooms. They are a little too fussy and lack a certain dignified formality that one looks for in the rooms downstairs. For, however simple one's mode of living, there should be a feeling of reserve and formality in the rooms where the formal affairs of life are carried on. The design and color of curtains to be used in the country home may be startling, ultra-modern and most vivid.

The brilliancy of everything about helps to carry out successfully a striking hanging. They enliven and refresh us, and in some cases, especially, with the designs and colors of the new Austrian and French materials, they most surely amuse us. They are grotesque, but with a naïveté that saves them from the ridiculous. The colors are wonderfully though fearfully blended; they are never muggy or confused; one color is simply and directly laid to the next.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Wonderful Bedroom Curtains Styles


Wonderful Bedroom Curtains Styles


You know that curtains are essential for bedrooms for the décor and wonderful look of your bedroom. Curtains are used to block the sunlight from coming into your room and they give you privacy from outside as well. Lined bedroom curtains are used for insulation and soundproofing in your bedroom. To buy-curtains at half price you have to make a through search.
You can find various colors, designs and styles in curtains; select the curtain according to your bedroom style. The color of bedroom curtains should go with the furnishing, and make a distinctive style that matches your bedroom design.
Here are some of the options in bedroom curtains and blinds:
The first bedroom curtain style: Linen Curtains
This type, Blue and maroon hue of linen curtains, would absolutely boost the grace and glow of your bedroom. Bold-colored linen- blinds are being vastly used in modern themed bedrooms. It is your choice if you want to apply muted or darks colors like purple, black, grey or dark brown. Linen blinds are inexpensive and are available in countless varieties of styles and colors. Your desired option must be strong and simply cleanable linen-blinds.
The second bedroom curtain style: Box Pleated blinds
A lot of people normally use box pleated curtains in their bedrooms as they look neat and give your bedroom a customized look. Although these-curtains are more expensive than plain-curtains, but they definitely add an elegant look to your bedroom design.
The third bedroom curtain style: Sheer or Transparent Blinds
There is no best fit than sheer or transparent curtains for romantic couples as they disperse colored light into your bedroom. Sheer curtains are available in two patterns; plain and textured. You have an option to choose from the different curtain cloths. Flowers and intricate embroidery clothes allow you to magnify the desired effect with creative ideas. You can create an exciting environment in your bedroom by inventing an amazing idea. The biggest pro of sheer curtains is that they allow a lot of sunlight in your bedroom, while the problem is that they ca not afford privacy. However, sheer curtains with drapes are good to maintain privacy in your room.
The fourth bedroom curtain style: Swag and Jabot Style Curtains
You have to use swag and jabot style curtains for a welcoming look for your bedroom interior. These types of curtains can be used in any room. To mount swags and jabots, you have three options; single, double or triple swags. Swag and jabot style curtains need heavy fabrics so they are on little expensive side.
The fifth bedroom curtain style: Layered Curtains
These layered blinds are obtainable in different styles and light colors. Layered curtains are prepared with heavy fabrics and give your bedroom a nice look. Match the color of the curtains with the rest of furnishing, and it would give your bedroom a fantastic look.
There is no doubt that the color of your blinds should go with the adjacent walls; however, you should not use dark color on the adjacent light colored wall. The material of the shades should be chosen according to your upholstery or furniture. Cotton and silk curtains are conventionally being used by everyone; however, now you also have option of polyester and synthetic curtains. For a pleasant look of your bedroom, the options are self-painted, weaved and colored pattern shades.

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